Hut Quotes
Quotes tagged as "hut"
Showing 1-9 of 9

“Not that anyone would trouble themselves invading a timber hut in a mangrove forest farther away from the Bay of Bengal.”
― The Oldest Dance
― The Oldest Dance

“How does she live here alone? He wonders, forgetting that he, too, used to live in such a hut once, until a certain mesmerizer designed an entire mansion for him; until the man said he had to guard the North.”
― The Oldest Dance
― The Oldest Dance

“I dream that one day I would be a published writer and people would read my books - if not, I would be living in the mountains in a small hut, near a pond where swans swim, writing a diary for myself.”
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“We live in a world where a hut made of clay is more durable than brick buildings, because poverty doesn't allow it to be reconstructed.”
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“The current generation of huts might help creative folk focus on making new work but the bothy's original function was more egalitarian.
It wanted to offer shelter in remote Scottish locations for walkers and climbers, the idea being that if hikers made the sacrifice to explore extreme locations they should be rewarded by basic accommodation that was free of charge.
The concept was rolled out across the country and aroused a new kind of generosity among landowners.
More than a hundred of these shelters are provided by estate owners on the proviso they are left clean and undamaged.
"Bothying" came about as agricultural methods changed and farmsteads were increasingly abandoned.
During the 1940s the idea of leisure was shifting as it began to mean roaming in the hills and countryside.
Walkers looked for shelter on their meanderings and these small buildings did the trick.
All share the same unique highlight: they are sited within some of the most breath-taking scenery that rural Scotland has to offer.
To come across a bothy is the closest experience Scotland has to a palm tree dotted island mirage after hours stranded out at sea.
With one slight difference: this vision is real.”
― The Art of Coorie: How to Live Happy the Scottish Way
It wanted to offer shelter in remote Scottish locations for walkers and climbers, the idea being that if hikers made the sacrifice to explore extreme locations they should be rewarded by basic accommodation that was free of charge.
The concept was rolled out across the country and aroused a new kind of generosity among landowners.
More than a hundred of these shelters are provided by estate owners on the proviso they are left clean and undamaged.
"Bothying" came about as agricultural methods changed and farmsteads were increasingly abandoned.
During the 1940s the idea of leisure was shifting as it began to mean roaming in the hills and countryside.
Walkers looked for shelter on their meanderings and these small buildings did the trick.
All share the same unique highlight: they are sited within some of the most breath-taking scenery that rural Scotland has to offer.
To come across a bothy is the closest experience Scotland has to a palm tree dotted island mirage after hours stranded out at sea.
With one slight difference: this vision is real.”
― The Art of Coorie: How to Live Happy the Scottish Way

“Auf dem Kopf hatte er einen Strohhut mit zwei Löchern in der Krempe, die vermuten ließen, dass der Hut ehemals die Kopfbedeckung eines Pferes gewesen war.”
― Sweet Thursday
― Sweet Thursday

“In a simple wooden hut, you can create great universal ideas because the seed of the great ideas often grows and develops in the land of modesty!”
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“Waking up in a hut clarifies our relationship to the land around us.
The things we think are essential to living melt away and less complicated ideas take their place.
All we really need is fire, a place to wash, a desk to draw or form or think.
Somewhere to capture a new view of the world and somewhere comfortable to sleep.”
― The Art of Coorie: How to Live Happy the Scottish Way
The things we think are essential to living melt away and less complicated ideas take their place.
All we really need is fire, a place to wash, a desk to draw or form or think.
Somewhere to capture a new view of the world and somewhere comfortable to sleep.”
― The Art of Coorie: How to Live Happy the Scottish Way

“A stone hut is not an ordinary house because it has the two most important things that an ordinary house does not have: Magic and tank-like sturdiness!”
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